this post was submitted on 31 Dec 2023
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Autour du monde

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Communauté dédiée à l'exploration des mondes. 🔭

« L'Espérance voit ce qui n'est pas encore et qui sera. Elle aime ce qui n'est pas encore et qui sera. Dans le futur du temps et de l'éternité. »

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago

Extrait

There are many ways a college student might spend spring break. Making an archaeological breakthrough is not usually one of them. In his first year at Harvard, Manny Medrano did just that.

“There’s something in me, I can’t explain where it came from, but I love the idea of digging around and trying to find secrets hidden from the past,” Medrano says.

With the help of his professor, Gary Urton*, a scholar of Pre-Columbian studies, Medrano interpreted a set of six khipus, knotted cords used for record keeping in the Inca Empire. By matching the khipus to a colonial-era Spanish census document, Medrano and Urton uncovered the meaning of the cords in greater detail than ever before. Their findings could contribute to a better understanding of daily life in the Andean civilization.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

For those okay with shipping the story of a college student playing around with data in Excel during his down time.

Medrano noticed that the way each cord was tied onto the khipu seemed to correspond to the social status of the 132 people recorded in the census document. The colors of the strings also appeared to be related to the people’s first names. The correlations seemed too strong to be a coincidence.